Part 6, 1916] AGARICACEAR 387 
cinereous when dry: spores subglobose, hyaline, 5-6 X 4-5 u: stipe slender, equal or narrowed 
downward, glabrous, white, hollow, 2.5-5 cm. long, 2-4 mm. thick. 
‘TYPE LOCALITY: Massachusetts. 
Hastrrat: Mossy or swampy ground. 
DISTRIBUTION: Known only from the type locality. 
7. Camarophyllus caespitosus Murrill. 
Hydrocybe caespitosa' Murrill, Mycologia 6: 2. 1914. 
Hygrophorus caespitosus Murrill, Mycologia 6:2. 1914. 
Pileus convex to obconic, depressed at the center, loosely or densely clustered, about 
2-2.5 cm. broad and 1.5 cm. thick; surface dry, melleous, ornamented with brown, innate, 
pointed scales, which are denser on the disk: context flavous, mild; lamellae broad, ventricose, 
distant, sinuate-decurrent, stramineous to cremeous: spores ellipsoid, pointed at one end, 
smooth, hyaline, granular, 7.5-8.5 X 4-5 yw: stipe equal or enlarged above, glabrous, shining, 
citrinous, spongy within, 4-5 cm. long, 3-5 mm. thick. 
TYPE LOCALITY: New York City. 
Hasitat: Among moss in pastures. 
Distrisutrion: New York and North Carolina. 
8. Camarophyllus fulvosus (Bolt.) Murrill. 
Agaricus fuluosus Bolt. Hist. Fung. 56. 1788. 
Agaricus pratensis Pers. Syn. Fung. 304. 1801. Not A. cen Scop. 1772 
Agaricus turbinatus Schum. Enum. Pl. Saell. 2: 317. 1803 
Hygrophorus pratensis Fries, Epicr. Myc. 326. 1838. 
Camarophyllus pratensis P. Karst. Bidr. Finl. Nat. Folk 32: 225. 1879. 
Hydrocybe pratensis Murrill, Mycologia 6:2. 1914, 
Pileus firm, convex to expanded, often turbinate, 2-5 cm. broad; surface glabrous, not 
viscid, buff, tawny, white, or grayish: context thick, firm, white, edible, of delicate flavor; 
lamellae long-decurrent, thick, distant, often interveined, white or yellowish: spores subglobose 
to ellipsoid, hyaline, 6-8 X 5-6 uw: stipe short, smooth, equal or tapering downward, solid or 
stuffed, white or subconcolorous, 3-5 cm. long, 1 cm. thick. 
Tyre Locality: Halifax, England. 
Hasrrat: In woods and pastures. 
Distripution: Canada to Alabama and west to Oregon and California; also in Europe. 
InLustrations: Ann. Rep. N. Y¥. State Mus. 48: pl. 28, f. 11-17; Bres. Funghi Mang. #1. 69; 
Bull. Herb. Bee 587,f.1; 1. Dufour, Atl. Champ. pl. 43; Fries, Sv. Aetl. Svamp. pl. 30; Gill. Champ. 
Fr. pl. 131 (345); Mycologia 2: pl. 27, f. 1; 6: pl. 113, f. 3; Sow. Engl. Fungi pl. 141 (as A. miniatus). 
9. Camarophyllus auratocephalus (Ellis) Murrill. 
Agaricus (Clitocybe) auratocephalus Ellis, Bull. Torrey Club 6:75. 1876. 
Clitocybe chrysocephala Sacc. Syl. Fung. 5: 190. 1887. 
Hygrophorus mephiticus Peck, Bull. Torrey Club 33: 213, 1906. 
Pileus obtuse-conic, expanding to convex, with a fleshy umbo, gregarious or subcespitose, 
about 3.5 cm. broad; surface smooth but of fibrous texture, at length more or less rimose-striate, 
golden-yellow: context having a strong, peculiar smell when fresh, and especially when drying: 
lamellae broad, ventricose, fleshy, subsinuate with a decurrent tooth, not crowded, golden-yel- 
low, becoming orange-red in drying: spores short-oblong, somewhat irregular in shape, 10» 
long: stipe usually compressed and crooked, attenuate at both ends, hollow, smooth, brittle, 
golden-yellow, 7.5-10 cm. long, 5-6 mm. thick. 
TYPE Locatity: Newfield, New Jersey. 
Hasirat: In swampy ground. 
DistRIBUTION: Massachusetts, southern New York, New Jersey, and the mountains of western 
North Carolina. 
Exsiccatt: Ellis & Ev. N. Am. Fungi 1911. 
10. Camarophyllus subrufescens (Peck) Murrill. 
Hygrophorus subrufescens Peck, Bull. N. V. State Mus. 67: 23. 1903. 
Pileus fleshy, but thin on the margin, convex or nearly plane, about 2.5 cm. broad; surface 
dry, minutely floccose-squamulose, pale-pink or grayish-red: context whitish, faintly tinged 
